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Chapter 21 The Great Depression Begins

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Title: Chapter 21 The Great Depression Begins


1
Chapter 21 The Great Depression Begins
Section Notes
Video
The Great Depression Begins
The Great Crash Americans Face Hard Times Hoover
as President
Maps
History Close-up
The Election of 1928 The Dust Bowl
Life in a Hooverville
Quick Facts
Images
Distribution of Wealth, 1929 Causes of the 1929 S
tock Market Crash Economic Impact of the Great De
pression Visual Summary The Great Depression Beg
ins
Fallen on Hard Times The Dust Bowl Relief Line
Japanese American Migrant Workers
2
The Great Crash
The Main Idea The stock market crash of 1929 reve
aled weaknesses in the American economy and
trigger a spreading economic crisis.
Reading Focus What economic factors and condi
tions made the American economy appear prosperous
in the 1920s? What were the basic economic weakne
sses in the American economy in the late 1920s?
What events led to the stock market crash of
October 1929? What were the effects of the crash
on the economy of the United States and the world?
3
The Appearance of Prosperity
  • Strong Economy
  • Between 1922 and 1928 the U.S. gross national
    product, or total value of all goods and
    services, rose 40 percent.
  • Though farmers and some other workers didnt
    benefit, the overall economy performed well,
    especially for automakers and those who made auto
    parts.
  • Overall unemployment remained low, averaging
    around five percent between 1923 and 1929.
  • Union membership slowed as employers expanded
    welfare capitalism programs, or employee
    benefits.
  • This feeling of prosperity encouraged workers to
    buy new products and enjoy leisure activities
    such as movies.
  • Strong Stock Market
  • The stock market, where people buy stocks, or
    shares, in companies, performed very well in the
    1920s, with stock values sharply increasing each
    month.
  • The value of stocks traded quadrupled over nine
    years.
  • The steep rise in stock prices made people think
    the market would never drop, and more ordinary
    Americans bought stocks than ever before.
  • The number of shares traded rose from 318 million
    in 1920 to over 1 billion in 1929.
  • Business leaders said everyone could get rich
    from stocks.

4
High Hopes
Faith in business and government
The election of 1928
5
Economic Weaknesses
  • While many Americans enjoyed good fortune in the
    1920s, many serious problems bubbled underneath
    the surface.
  • One problem in the American economy was the
    uneven distribution of wealth during the 1920s.
  • The wealthiest one percent of the populations
    income grew 75 percent, but the average worker
    saw under a 10 percent gain.
  • For most Americans, rising prices swallowed up
    any increase in salary.
  • Coal miners and farmers were very hard hit, but
    by 1929 over 70 percent of U.S. families had too
    low an income for a good standard of living.
  • Four out of every five families couldnt save any
    money during the so-called boom years.
  • Credit allowed Americans to buy expensive goods,
    but by the end of the decade many people reached
    their credit limits, and purchases slowed.
  • Warehouses became filled with goods no one could
    afford to buy.

6
Credit and the Stock Market
7
The Stock Market Crashes
  • The steady growth of the early 1920s gave way to
    astounding gains at the end of the decade until
    its September 3, 1929, peak.
  • Many people were beginning to see trouble as
    consumer purchasing fell and rumors of a collapse
    circulated.
  • On Thursday, October 24, 1929, some nervous
    investors began selling their stocks and others
    followed, creating a huge sell-off with no
    buyers.
  • Stock prices plunged, triggering an even greater
    panic to sell.
  • Toward the end of the day, leading bankers joined
    together to buy stocks and prevent a further
    collapse, which stopping the panic through
    Friday.
  • But the next Monday the market sank again, and
    Black Tuesday, October 29, was the worst day,
    affecting stocks of even solid companies.
  • The damage was widespread and catastrophic. In a
    few short days the market had dropped in value by
    about 16 billion, nearly one half of its
    pre-crash value.

8
Effects of the Crash
  • Impact on Individuals
  • Though some thought the market would rally,
    countless individual investors were ruined.
  • Margin buyers were hit the hardest, because
    brokers demanded they pay back the money they had
    been loaned.
  • To repay the loans, investors were forced to sell
    their stocks for far less than they had paid, and
    some lost their entire savings making up the
    difference.
  • In the end, many investors owed enormous amounts
    of money to their brokers, with no stocks or
    savings left to pay their debts.
  • Effects on Banks
  • The crash triggered a banking crisis, as
    frightened depositors rushed to withdraw their
    money, draining the bank of funds.
  • Many banks themselves had invested directly or
    indirectly in the stock market by buying
    companies stocks or by lending brokers money to
    loan to investors on margin.
  • When investors couldnt repay margins, banks lost
    money, too.
  • These failures drove many banks out of business.

9
More Effects of the Crash
10
Americans Face Hard Times
The Main Idea The Great Depression and the natura
l disaster known as the Dust Bowl produced
economic suffering on a scale the nation had
never seen before. Reading Focus How did the
Great Depression develop? What was the human imp
act of the Great Depression? Why was the Dust Bow
l so devastating?
11
Great Depression by the Numbers
  • After the stock market crash, economic flaws
    helped the nation sink into the Great Depression,
    the worst economic downturn in history.
  • The stock market collapse strained the resources
    of banks and many failed, thus creating greater
    anxiety.
  • In 1929 banks had little cash on hand and were
    vulnerable to runs, or a string of nervous
    depositors withdrawing money.
  • A run could quickly drain a bank of all its cash
    and force its closure.
  • In the months after October 1929, bank runs
    struck nationwide and hundreds of banks failed,
    including the enormous Bank of the United
    States.
  • Bank closures wiped out billions in savings by
    1933.

Today, insurance from the federal government
protects most peoples deposits, and laws today
require banks to keep a large percentage of their
assets in cash to be paid to depositors upon
request.
12
Farm Failures
  • The hard times farmers faced got worse during the
    Great Depression, when widespread joblessness and
    poverty cut down on the demand for food as many
    Americans simply went hungry.
  • By 1933, with farmers unable to sell food they
    produced, farm prices had sunk to 50 percent of
    their already low 1929 levels.
  • Lower prices meant lower income for farmers, and
    many borrowed money from banks to pay for land
    and equipment.
  • As incomes dropped, farmers couldnt pay back
    their loans, and in the first five years of the
    1930s, hundreds of thousands of farms went
    bankrupt or suffered foreclosure.

Foreclosure occurs when a lender takes over
ownership of a property from an owner who has
failed to make loan payments.
13
Unemployment
  • The year following the crash of October 1929 saw
    a sharp drop in economic activity and a steep
    rise in unemployment.
  • Such negative trends are not uncommon in times of
    economic downturn, but the extent and duration of
    these trends made the Great Depression
    different.
  • By 1933 the gross national product dropped over
    40 percent from its pre-crash levels.
  • Unemployment reached a staggering 25 percent, and
    among some groups the numbers were even higher
  • In the African American neighborhood of Harlem,
    for example, unemployment reached 50 percent in
    1932.

14
The Human Impact of the Great Depression
15
The Emotional Impact of the Depression
  • The Great Depressions worst blow might have been
    to the minds and spirits of the American people.
  • Though many shared the same fate, the unemployed
    often felt that they failed as people.
  • Accepting handouts deeply troubled many proud
    Americans. Their shame and despair was reflected
    in the high suicide rates of the time.
  • Anger was another common emotion, because many
    felt the nation had failed the hardworking
    citizens who had helped build it.

16
Devastation in the Dust Bowl
  • Nature delivered another cruel blow. In 1931 rain
    stopped falling across much of the Great Plains
    region.
  • This drought, or period of below average
    rainfall, lasted for several years, and millions
    of people had fled the area by the time it
    lifted.
  • Agricultural practices in the 1930s left the area
    vulnerable to droughts.
  • Land once covered with protective grasses was now
    bare, with no vegetation to hold the soil in
    place.
  • When wind storms came, they stripped the rich
    topsoil and blew it hundreds of miles. The dust
    sometimes flew as far as the Atlantic Coast.
  • Dust mounds choked crops and buried farm
    equipment, and dust blew into windows and under
    doors.
  • The storms came year after year, and the hardest
    hit areas of Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, New
    Mexico, and Texas eventually became known as the
    Dust Bowl.

17
Fleeing the Plains
18
Hoover as President
The Main Idea Herbert Hoover came to office with
a clear philosophy of government, but the events
of the Great Depression overwhelmed his
responses. Reading Focus What was President
Hoovers basic philosophy about the proper role
of government? What actions did Hoover take in re
sponse to the Great Depression?
How did the nation respond to Hoovers efforts?
19
Hoovers Philosophy
  • Herbert Hoover came to the presidency with a core
    set of beliefs he had formed over a long career
    in business and government service.
  • He had served in the Harding and Coolidge
    administrations and shared many of their ideas
    about governments role in business, favoring as
    little government intervention as possible.
  • Hoover believed unnecessary government threatened
    prosperity and the spirit of the American
    people.
  • A key part of this spirit was something he called
    rugged individualism.

Hoover didnt reject government oversight or
regulation of certain businesses or think
businesses should do exactly as they pleased, but
he thought it was important not to destroy
peoples belief in their own responsibility and
power.
20
The Associative State
21
Hoovers Response to the Great Depression
22
The Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act
The Act
The Effects
23
The Nation Responds to Hoover
  • Questions of Credibility
  • Hoover eventually saw the limitations of his
    ideals and pushed for some direct relief, but his
    optimistic claims about the economy undermined
    his credibility with voters.
  • Early on, when millions lost their jobs, he said
    the nations basic economic foundation was
    sound.
  • Just a few months after the crash he announced I
    am convinced we have passed the worst, and he
    spoke glowingly about the relief efforts.
  • Millions of Americans did not share Hoovers
    viewpoint.
  • Questions of Compassion
  • Many Americans came to question Hoovers
    compassion.
  • As economic conditions grew worse, his
    unwillingness to consider giving direct relief to
    the people became hard for most Americans to
    understand.
  • When Hoover finally broke his stated beliefs and
    pushed for programs like the Reconstruction
    Finance Corporation, people wondered why he was
    willing to give billions of dollars to banks and
    businesses but not to individuals.

24
The Bonus Marchers
  • In May 1932 some World War I veterans set up camp
    near the capital.
  • The men were in Washington to pressure the
    federal government to pay a veterans bonusa
    cash award they were promised for their war
    service.
  • The bonus was not due for many years, but the men
    needed the money.
  • Congress refused to meet the demands of these
    bonus marchers, and some left. A core group
    remained, including women and children.
  • In July, as police and U.S. soldiers began
    clearing the area of veterans, violence erupted
    and the camp went up in flames, injuring
    hundreds.
  • Hoover did not want to pay the bonus because he
    was concerned about balancing the budget.
    However, many Americans were greatly disturbed by
    the sight of soldiers using weapons against
    homeless veterans.
  • The publics opinion of Hoover fell even more.

25
The Voters React
  • Trying to balance the budget, Hoover pushed for
    and signed a large tax increase in 1932.
  • This move was highly unpopular, because voters
    wanted more government spending to aid the poor.
  • The 1930 Congressional election provided early
    signs that the public was fed up with President
    Hoover.
  • Democrats finally won the majority of seats in
    the House of Representatives and made gains in
    the Senate.
  • By the 1932 presidential election, it seemed
    certain Hoover would lose the race.
  • The Great Depression showed few signs of ending,
    and Hoovers ability to influence people and
    events was nearly gone.

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